Exclusive: Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine supply to the EU 30% below plans,
sources say
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[February 17, 2021]
By Francesco Guarascio
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Pfizer has not yet
delivered to the European Union about 10 million COVID-19 vaccine doses
that were due in December, EU officials said, leaving it about one-third
short of the supplies it had expected by now from the U.S. company.
The delay is another blow to the EU, which has also been hit by delays
in deliveries from Anglo-Swedish drugmaker AstraZeneca and U.S. company
Moderna, and had also faced earlier delays on the Pfizer vaccine.
It also raises questions about the rationale of an EU vaccine export
control scheme which was set up in late January to ensure timely
deliveries but has not yet been activated, despite the supply
shortfalls.
By the middle of last week, Pfizer had delivered to the EU 23 million
doses of the COVID-19 vaccine it developed with German firm BioNTech,
said an EU official who is directly involved in talks with the U.S.
company.
That was about 10 million doses less than Pfizer had promised to
supplied by mid-February, said a second official who is also involved in
the talks.
Pfizer declined to comment, saying schedules of its deliveries were
confidential. The executive European Commission did not respond to a
request for comment on delivery shortfalls.
EU officials have said Pfizer committed to delivering 3.5 million doses
a week from the start of January, for a total of 21 million shots by
mid-February.
In mid-January, there was a temporary hiccup in supplies which EU
officials say was largely resolved last month.. But a lot of doses that
were due to arrive in December are still missing, the two EU officials
said.
The Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine was approved for use in the EU on Dec. 21.
The following day, BioNTech said the companies would ship to the EU 12.5
million doses by the end of the month..
Only about 2 million of those doses due in December have been delivered,
according to Reuters calculations.
The shortfall would amount to about 30% of the total supplies pledged
for the period from December until mid-February.
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Vials labelled "COVID-19 Coronavirus Vaccine" and sryinge are seen
in front of displayed Pfizer logo in this illustration taken,
February 9, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
One EU official said the company had committed to delivering the
missing doses by the end of March.
The EU has two contracts with Pfizer for the supply of 600 million
vaccine doses.
TRADE FLOWS
Although the EU's own supplies have fallen short, the European
Commission has approved all requests for export of COVID-19 vaccines
- mostly from Pfizer/BioNTech - since it set up its mechanism to
monitor flows.
In the period between Jan. 30 and Feb. 16, the EU gave the green
light to 57 requests for vaccine export to 24 countries, including
Britain and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), a Commission spokeswoman
said on Wednesday.
Before the monitoring scheme was set up, the bloc had already
exported millions of vaccines to Israel, Britain and Canada among
others, mostly Pfizer's, according to customs data cited in a EU
document seen by Reuters.
Israel has injected the first vaccine dose to more than 75% of its
population, figures from University of Oxford-based Our World in
Data show. The figure for the UAE is around 50% and for Britain it
is above 20%.
EU countries on average have vaccinated only about 5% of their
populations, according to Our World in Data.
Countries with a high number of inoculations are already vaccinating
people who are not among the most vulnerable, while those most in
need elsewhere have not yet had a shot.
The World Health Organization has set the target of inoculating 20%
of poor countries' population by the end of the year.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio @fraguarascio, Editing by Timothy
Heritage)
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